Ferrari built a one-of-a-kind car for a wealthy customer
The "458 MM Speciale" was designed by Ferrari's own in-house design team, and nods at the classic Ferrari 288 GTO of the 1980's, copying the blacked-out A-pillars on either side of the windshield to create what the client called "a visor effect."
The car also includes a heavily-redesigned, rounder nose and what look to be air intakes just before the rear wheels, a feature it shares with the 458's production replacement - the 488 GTB.
While the 488's intakes ducts are a necessity of the new car's air-thirsty turbocharged V8 engine, the 458 Speciale was normally aspirated. Ferrari claim more air is needed to cool the notoriously-hot running engine because of a "different rake of the rear."
By which they may rightly mean "we thought it looks neat."
The character line which extends from the intakes and forward around the car's nose may also be a subtle hint at the deep, wrap-around black character line which was defining feaure of just about every single Ferrari model of the eighties.
The 458 MM Speciale also includes a redesigned rear spoiler and a custom sound system, interior, and special wheels.
Ferrari is not new to making one-off cars for its best clients. Other famous examples include a recent $4.7 million salute to the 1980's Berlinetta Boxer built specially for guitar legend Sir Eric Clapton and a fleet of four door 456s for the Sultan of Brunei.